Updated
Jan. 4,
2023, 2:53 p.m. ET14 minutes ago
14 minutes
ago
Catie
Edmondson
https://www.nytimes.com/live/2023/01/04/us/house-speaker-vote
The deadlock over the House speaker job stretches
into a second day. Here is the latest.
Representative Kevin McCarthy, Republican of
California, lost a fifth consecutive vote for speaker on Wednesday as the
deadlocked House of Representatives slogged through its second day without a
leader or sworn members, amid a rebellion by far-right members of the G.O.P.
that led to a historic struggle on the House floor.
After three
defeats on Tuesday, Mr. McCarthy and his allies were grasping to win over
defectors, but his efforts were falling flat, even after former President
Donald J. Trump made a direct appeal for Republican lawmakers to vote for Mr.
McCarthy, saying he “will do a good job, and maybe even a GREAT JOB.”
Here’s what
to know:
The thin
Republican majority in the chamber means almost all of the party’s members must
agree on a speaker. If all members of the House are voting and participating,
the winner needs 218 votes. Republicans control 222 seats. On Tuesday, Mr.
McCarthy drew at most 203 votes. On Wednesday, his total slipped to 201.
The
nation’s legislative process is at a standstill: Members cannot be sworn in,
adopt rules or vote on bills until a speaker is chosen.
Far-right
Republicans have lined up by turns behind candidates including, on Tuesday, Jim
Jordan, who voted for Mr. McCarthy; and, on Wednesday, Byron Donalds, the
party’s first Black nominee for speaker. Mr. Donalds, of Florida, drew 20 votes.
The lawmakers do not expect their candidates to win but wish to register their
displeasure with Mr. McCarthy.
The
Democrats are united behind their leader, Representative Hakeem Jeffries of New
York, who earned the most votes, 212, on all five ballots but will almost
certainly not win because his party controls only 212 seats, short of the
majority required.
Until
Tuesday, the House had not failed to elect a speaker on the first roll call
vote since 1923, when the election stretched for nine ballots. House precedent
dictates that members continue to take successive votes until someone — Mr.
McCarthy or a different nominee — secures the majority needed to prevail.

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